Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘Lack of judgment’ in Harper tweet

- Teresa Wright

• Former prime minister Stephen Harper raised eyebrows Monday when he publicly offered his congratula­tions to Viktor Orban after the controvers­ial political leader was reelected as prime minister of Hungary.

In a tweet late Monday, Harper congratula­ted Orban — whose election platform openly demonized migrants and asylum seekers in Europe as a security threat — for winning “a decisive fourth term” for his Fidesz party, which now holds a twothirds majority in Hungary’s national legislatur­e.

“Congratula­tions to Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Hungary’s Fidesz for winning a decisive fourth term! The IDU and I are looking forward to working with you,” Harper tweeted.

The post prompted a number of Twitter users to point out Orban’s populist right-wing ideology and controvers­ial policies.

Frank Graves, president of Ekos Research Associates, said he was so surprised by the former Conservati­ve prime minister’s tweet, he thought Harper’s account had been hacked.

“Mr. Harper is a pretty shrewd character and I thought it, frankly, showed a lack of judgment on his part,” Graves said Tuesday in an interview.

“There’s a lot of deep skepticism about Mr. Orban and particular­ly his policies such that I would have thought this would be an area where you would want to give a pass.”

Harper was unanimousl­y elected chairman of the Internatio­nal Democratic Union in February. The centre-right organizati­on is made up of more than 80 conservati­ve political parties worldwide, including Orban’s Fidesz party.

The former prime minister did not respond directly to requests for comment, but Rachel Curran, a senior associate at Harper’s consulting company Harper & Associates, said the tweet was simply a standard communicat­ion about the activity of a member party.

“He’s not pronouncin­g on the merits of Mr. Orban’s government or his political campaign, he’s simply congratula­ting him as a successful member of the IDU who recently received a massive democratic mandate from Hungarians,” Curran said.

“That was the sole purpose behind his message.”

Some people have been using the tweet to “get a shot at Mr. Harper,” she added.

Internatio­nal observers of the Hungarian election from the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe issued a statement saying “intimidati­ng and xenophobic rhetoric” from state-run media and “opaque campaign financing” limited the opportunit­y for genuine debate during the campaign.

Curran stressed that it would be inappropri­ate for Harper to comment or interfere in the domestic politics of any member parties of the IDU. But she added Harper is interested in looking at ways to make the organizati­on more active and effective.

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